Half Marathon Training: Week 7

by Bryan on 9/14/2008 at 6:09 PM in Health and Fitness

As good as last week was, this week was tough. I suppose that I shouldn’t be surprised, as things always seem to have a way of evening out. On the bright side, the week ended on a high note, with a very, very good long run this morning. Here’s the week’s training:

  • Day 1
    • Rest.
  • Day 2
    • Scheduled: 5 miles easy @ 10:08/mile – I was tired, the course was hilly, the weather was humid,  and I just didn’t want to get up for this. But I did. 5 miles @ 9:58/mile pace, and my average HR was 157 bpm.
    • Push ups – I haven’t done any push ups in two weeks, and I never did do my final test for the 100 Push Up Challenge. Since I didn’t lift the day before, I decided to do a test, and then several sets of 20. The test came in at 75, and then I did 8 sets of 20.
  • Day 3
    • Scheduled: 5 miles easy @ 10:08/mile – Same as yesterday—I’m just not feeling it so far this week, but again, I got out there and did it. 10:01/mile, and my average HR was 158 bpm.
  • Day 4
    • Scheduled: Tempo Run; 6 miles total, with 1 mile warm up, 4 miles @ 8:40/mile, and 1 mile cool down. As you know, this run sucked. It didn’t start out bad—in fact, I was feeling pretty good well into the third mile. But halfway through mile 4, I caved. I stopped twice in the last half mile of the tempo portion of the run. It was 75°F with over 90% humidity, but still…I was so close to finishing this thing. The warm up mile was in 10:56, with an average HR of 135 bpm. The 4 tempo miles came in at 9:07/mile pace, if I factor in the 1:54 of stopped time on the Garmin (which I think I need to do), and an average HR of 176 bpm. The cool down mile was in 11:50, with a HR of 170 bpm, and I threw some strides in there for good measure.
  • Day 5
    • Scheduled: 4 miles easy @ 10:08/mile – with what happened the day before, this ended up turning into a mini-tempo run. It felt good. Mile 1 came in at 9:45, with an average HR of 145, and then I eased the pace down through the next two miles. Mile 2 came in at 8:51, with an average HR of 164, and mile 3 was 8:11, with an average HR of 182. Mile 4 was a warm down mile, and I completed it in a very comfortable and slow feeling 9:38, with an average HR of 174. Obviously at that pace, my HR didn’t come down much, but believe me when I say that the pace felt comfortable, and surprisingly slow.
  • Day 6
    • Upper body strength training. I didn’t feel so great today, and it really showed during my workout. Just had no energy.
  • Day 7
    • Scheduled: 11 miles @ 10:08/mile – as I’ve mentioned, this was a great run. Since I am almost at the halfway mark of my half marathon training, I decided to see how I am doing, compared to what I am hoping to run on race day (between 9:00 – 9:30/mile). I figured the best way to do that, without actually racing was to make today’s run a progression run. For the first 5 miles, I tried to keep the pace between 10:00 – 10:08/mile, and then for the next 5 miles, I wanted to slowly bring the pace down with each mile: 9:50, 9:40, 9:30, 9:20, and finally 9:10. The last mile was left as a warm down mile. My mile splits ended up like this (Total time: 1:46:58 – 9:44/mile – avg HR 159):
      • Mile 1: 10:08
      • Mile 2: 10:02
      • Mile 3: 9:58
      • Mile 4: 10:01
      • Mile 5: 10:00
      • Mile 6: 9:50
      • Mile 7: 9:35
      • Mile 8: 9:21
      • Mile 9: 9:14
      • Mile 10: 9:06
      • Mile 11: 9:38

So while the first 3 runs of the week weren’t so great, the last two runs were pretty good, and the last run was especially good, I think.

This next week is a cutback week, and marks the midpoint in my half marathon training, and I really don’t think it could’ve come at a better time. I’m also looking at doing one of two races next Saturday. The first is a 10K over in Dallas—the Tour des Fluers. This would be my first 10K race, and probably the best choice, given that I am training for a half marathon. The other race is a 5K and practically in our own backyard—the Run in the Dark in Keller.

The current plan, I think, is for me to run the 10K in the morning, while Julie cheers, and then flip roles in the evening, with Julie running the 5K while I cheer. I’ve thought about running both—racing the 10K, and trying to keep up with Julie on the 5K, but that probably isn’t the best thing for my training.



Legacy Comments

Dude, you gotta run the 10k..you gotta run it...

Posted by kevin on 9/19/2008 11:00:50 AM